City of Chicago v. Chicago City Railway Co.

272 Ill. 245
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 16, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 272 Ill. 245 (City of Chicago v. Chicago City Railway Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
City of Chicago v. Chicago City Railway Co., 272 Ill. 245 (Ill. 1916).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Cartwright

delivered the opinion of the court:

The defendant in error, the city of Chicago, brought two suits in the municipal court of Chicago against the plaintiff in error, the Chicago City Railway Company, to recover penalties,—one under an ordinance providing for transfers for continuous trips on the cars of the plaintiff in error within the city limits, and the other under the requirement that the plaintiff in error should post two or more notices in each car containing substantially so much ' of the section providing for .transfers as relates to transfer tickets. The cases were tried before the court without a jury and resulted in a fine of $100 for violating the section providing for transfers and $4550 for failure to post notices. The court certified that the validity of the ordinances was involved and the public interest required that a writ of error should be allowed from this court in each case. Accordingly writs of error were sued out and the cases were consolidated.

The cases were tried upon the testimony of one witness, the ordinances of the city and a stipulation of facts. The defendant has a street car line on Forty-seventh street running west from Lake Park avenue to Kedzie avenue. It also runs cars from Lake street south on State street to Archer avenue, southwest on Archer avenue to Canal street, south on Canal street to Twenty-ninth street, west on Twenty-ninth street to Wallace street, south on Wallace street to Root street, west on Root street to Halsted street, south on Halsted street to Forty-seventh street and west on Forty-seventh street half a mile to Racine avenue, where the cars turn south from the Forty-seventh street line into Racine avenue and continue south to Seventy-ninth street. The witness was a traction inspector for the city, and he testified that in order to make out a case against the defendant which he was instructed to make, he got on a west-bound Forty-seventh street car at Wentworth avenue, paid a cash fare, secured a transfer, left the car at Forty-seventh and Halsted streets and boarded a car running in the same direction on the Forty-seventh street line which would turn into Racine avenue at the junction point when that avenue was reached, intending to go south in that avenue. He tendered his transfer to the conductor and it was refused, and he was told that he would have to transfer at Racine avenue and Forty-seventh street, which was the junction point. The witness testified that at Forty-seventh and Halsted streets, where he attempted to make the change,' there are four saloon's,—one on each corner,—and a coal yard near by and four lights within one hundred feet; that at Forty-seventh street and Racine avenue there .is a saloon on each of three corners and a grocery store on the other, three arc lights near the corner, and the tracks of the Junction railway north, from which smoke and dust blow when the wind is in the north. The transfer given to the witness indicated the line on which it was issued, the direction in which the car was going and the time issued, and on the back was printed the following:

“Receivable only—at intersecting point, on a crossing, diverging or extension line—from person to or for whom issued, for a continuous trip in an onward direction.
“Good in reverse direction to next junction point on line from which issued.
“Void fifteen minutes after time punched.”

The defendant is organized under a special charter passed in 1859 and amended in Í865, authorizing it to construct single or double-track railways in such streets as the city council of Chicago should authorize, and upon such terms and conditions and with such rights.and privileges, immunities and exemptions as the council had contracted or might thereafter contract with it. Railway lines were constructed in the streets and controversies arose between the defendant and the city, which were settled in 1907 by an ordinance which was submitted to the legal voters of the city and adopted and which was accepted by the defendant. By the ordinance the defendant agreed to pay to the city fifty-five per cent of the net receipts of its business, and it was stipulated that it had paid the city under the contract $5,946,188.41. It also agreed to make expenditures, which it was agreed had been made to the amount of $28,306,108.17. One of the provisions of the ordinance was that the defendant should furnish transfers entitling a passenger to ride upon any other line of its railway system which connects with, crosses, intersects or comes within a distance of two hundred feet of the line of the street railway upon which the passenger first took passage and paid his fare, and that the transfer might designate the point or place of transfer, and the same must be used at such point or place within a reasonable time, not exceeding fifteen minutes after such point or place is reached- by the car from which-the passenger is transferred, provided that within that time a car shall pass that point or place of transfer in the direction and upon the route indicated by the transfer, and if not, the passenger should have the right to take the first available car. Section 2171 of the Chicago code of 1911 provided that a passenger who had paid his fare should be entitled to a transfer ticket entitling him, wdthout further charge', to be carried on any other line adjoining, connecting, crossing or intersecting any line of the street railway if used within one hour after the same is issued, at the point or place for which the transfer ticket is issued. On May 20, 1912, the section in question was amended by including elevated railroads, which was held in Metropolitan Elevated Railway Co. v. City of Chicago, 261 Ill. 624, to be beyond the power of the city. The section, therefore, was left the same as it existed prior to the amendment, and the prosecution was under the section as contained in the code and as amended. On November 13, 1913, an ordinance was passed reciting that four different railway companies operated street car lines within the city and that unified operation would greatly increase and improve the street railway facilities, and give to the Calumet district, where the existing fare was ten cents, the advantages of a single fare of five cents throughout the entire present and future limits of the city. Section 2 of that ordinance provided that it should be subject to all the terms, stipulations, requirements, conditions and obligations of the 1907 and subsequent traction ordinances of the city, except so far as such ordinances were expressly or by necessary implication modified or supplemented by that ordinance, and this was the last ordinance of the city council.

The claim of the city under these ordinances is that the railway company has no right to designate the place where the passenger may use the transfer, but that he has a right to change cars at any place he may choose before reaching a junction point, if he can take passage at that place in the direction of his destination in a car by which he can reach such destination. The railway company contends that under the conditions of the settlement ordinance, re-affirmed by the ordinance of 1913, it has a right to require the passenger to change cars at the place where the line by which he is to reach his destination crosses, intersects or connects with the line on which he is riding, and that the transfer may designate such place as provided in the contract ordinance of 1907.

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Related

City of Chicago v. O'Connell
116 N.E. 210 (Illinois Supreme Court, 1917)

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272 Ill. 245, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-chicago-v-chicago-city-railway-co-ill-1916.